And boy they weren’t kidding. After reading it, all I could say was wow. Post-election, some leftists took to Twitter to attempt to resurrect the meme of past lost presidential races where the Democrat won the popular vote, yet still lost the election.

One example was from Amanda Marcotte, who is a political writer for Salon.com. She tweeted: “Republicans lost the popular vote in Senate races by over 15 percentage points, but still gained two seats.”

take our poll - story continues below

How have you been greeting people this holiday season?

How have you been greeting people this holiday season?

How have you been greeting people this holiday season?*

Merry Christmas!

Happy Holidays!

Bah Humbug.

Make America Great Again!

Email*

Phone

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Completing this poll grants you access to iPatriot updates free of charge. You may opt out at anytime. You also agree to this site's Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

You may be thinking – what does she mean by the popular vote? You may also be thinking that Salon.com should probably hire new writers.

Well, I guess we have to assume that if she is speaking of the popular vote, the implication is that there must also be another type of vote. Otherwise, she would simply have said “the vote.” We know that during a presidential election there are indeed two types of votes – the popular and the Electoral College.

From those results, sprung forth cries from Democrats to scrap the Electoral College and rely on just the popular vote to determine presidential elections. It’s the “fair” thing to do. The Electoral College, they claim, is canceling out the will of people, don’t ya know.

Of course, those on the left that actually understand the genius of the Electoral College aren’t about to explain to their ignorant base the reason for it.

And evidently, judging by the tweets, there aren’t many on the left who grasp the concept of the Electoral College and fewer it seems who get that it’s only used for presidential elections.

Just for fun, I Googled the Electoral College. The first query of what “people also asked” was, “Is the Electoral College written in the Constitution?” Really? Is this really the sad state America finds itself in today?

In case anyone is interested, it is – Article II, Section 1. And it was amended in 1804, by the 12th Amendment.

Are leftists just this ignorant, or do some know how things work and are just playing to the lowest common denominator?

Maybe it’s the same old leftist strategy of trying to keep their base as angry as possible.

Just look at how they are reacting to this election. They can’t even be satisfied with the win they got – the House of Representatives. They must look beyond that victory to bemoan not also winning the Senate.

But I suppose this is understandable, as Democrats and leftists (redundant) believe all of government is their birthright.

The Beacon article cited tweet after tweet of the same “popular vote” mantra, adding that Democrats received over 40,500,000 votes to the Republican 31,500,000, yet the Republicans still picked up Senate seats.

Dems got 9 million more votes in Senate races but GOP picked up 3 seats. Like the electoral college which defies the popular vote, this is a recurring modern American theme https://t.co/qRcVc5SazP

At this point I thought – okay, let me get this straight. These leftists are quoting the total amounts of votes nationwide for all contested Senate seats combined and claiming this is unfair? Do I have this inference right?

If this is the implication, I guess we must assume that what they seek is a single national election with a cumulative total, and the winner of this cumulative total takes all? Is that what they mean? Why else would they cite the nationwide total?

Leftists are a confusing bunch and with each election cycle, win or lose, they seem to be becoming more unhinged and don’t seem to any happier either way.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author and are not not necessarily either shared or endorsed by iPatriot.com.

The Common Constitutionalist

Brent Smith, aka The Common Constitutionalist, is a constitutional conservative who advocates for first principles – the founders' original intent and enemy of progressives. He is former Navy and a martial arts expert. Smith considers himself just an average Joe with no formal journalism background – but rather than simply complain about the state of our nation, he took to the Internet to battle the left.

Join the conversation!

We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, vulgarity, profanity, all caps, or discourteous behavior. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain a courteous and useful public environment where we can engage in reasonable discourse.